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posted: 9 Feb 2008 18:41 from: Brian Lewis
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This is essentially for Martin, but I thought other folk who had their own web sites might be interested. When we revamped our web site on 28th Jan, we hooked into Google Analytics. This provides a wealth of information regarding visitors to your site. What I have yet to decide is what use I can make of most of it..... In the period 28th Jan - 7th Feb, we had 1371 visits. Visitors scanned 6887 pages - an average of 5.02 pages per visitor. 70.53% were first time visitors. They spent an average of 4 minutes 36 seconds on the site. I am happy with this - it is far longer than I spend on most sites. Direct traffic was 45.73% Traffic via Search engines was 30.63% - 26.40% was Google. As would be expected the main keyword was 'c&l finescale'. Traffic via referring sites was 23.63% 4.23% from S4 site. 3.79% from the GOG site and only 2.33% from UKmodelshops. The latter is disappointing, suggesting it is not used as fully as one would have thought. 72.06% used IE 22.83% used Firefox 2.92% used Safari 1.24% used Opera 0.51% used Netscape. Origins. Overwhelmingly from the UK. Then in diminishing order as follows: USA. Australia. France. Netherlands. New Zealand. Canada. Germany. Norway. Ireland. (This is very much in line with our own sales figures). Quite interesting. Clearly it is not in the league of some sites with half a million hits a day. But for a model railway site it probably is not too bad. Regards Brian Lewis Carrs - C+L Finescale. http://www.finescale.org.uk |
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posted: 9 Feb 2008 18:51 from: Martin Wynne
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Brian Lewis wrote: This is essentially for Martin, but I thought other folk who had their own web sites might be interested.Hi Brian, Many thanks for that. But really, you shouldn't need Google for that. I get all that, and more, from my hosting company. You probably do too, if you log into your control panel and select "Visitor Statistics". You can also access the daily server logs showing every single hit in detail, but you'd need half a lifetime to analyse it all. If it's of interest I will post some of the Templot web site stats later. regards, Martin. |
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posted: 9 Feb 2008 20:17 from: Paul Boyd
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Hi Brian Some of the amount of time people spend on sites that use Google Analytics is because we're waiting for the page to finish loading, with the "Waiting for google-analytics.com..." status bar telling the world why we're waiting. I find this annoying "feature" with more and more sites lately, suggesting that google's servers can't actually cope with the demand. As Martin says, your hosting provider should be able to provide all of this information. I no longer have the feature because I changed provider (nor do I really need it, which is why I wasn't bothered!) but your stats on browser usage pretty much reflected mine. People whose websites don't work properly with anything other than Internet Explorer really are losing a huge chunk of their audience. UKModelShops? I only ever visit that site to see the hosted traders pages. I couldn't actually find C&L on there, or more specifically I couldn't find it after a couple of minutes trying to find my way around the site. The 'Suppliers A-Z' isn't, and you don't seem to show in either Avon or Somerset. North Somerset doesn't exist at all, apparently! Incidentally, I just visited the webstats page for my empty Plusnet webspace. It's still being hit by crawlers and spiders, They won't find anything there |
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posted: 9 Feb 2008 22:16 from: Martin Wynne
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I wrote: If it's of interest I will post some of the Templot web site stats later.Not sure if it is of interest, but here's some summary info for January -- total transfer 11.4GB. Peak usage is always in the late evening (UK) as you might expect, but there is always a blip about 5pm. No idea why. Of the referring links, top of the list every month other than search engines is aways Steve Jones page at: http://www.electricnose.co.uk/layout/layout.html Closely followed by a model engineering site rather than model railways: http://www.modeleng.org/suppliers/supply_a.htm Odd that -- presumably because we are top of the list. There are reams and reams of this stuff, so I won't attempt to post the full daily breakdowns. I've no idea how this compares with similar sites. Anyone care to comment? vis_stats1.png vis_stats2.png vis_stats3.png vis_stats4.png regards, Martin. |
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posted: 10 Feb 2008 01:55 from: John Lewis
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Martin Wynne wrote: Peak usage is always in the late evening (UK) as you might expect, but there is always a blip about 5pm. No idea why. People looking at the site before leaving their offices? John |
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posted: 10 Feb 2008 02:36 from: Martin Wynne
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Brian Lewis wrote: This provides a wealth of information regarding visitors to your site. What I have yet to decide is what use I can make of most of it..... Hi Brian, Probably not as much use as you might think. Before relying too much on the numbers, here's a basic guide to how they are compiled: http://www.mrunix.net/webalizer/simpleton.html regards, Martin. |
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posted: 10 Feb 2008 03:36 from: BeamEnds click the date to link to this post click member name to view archived images |
Our peak is 3.00 am - from the Sates (Land Rover's smallest market)! We also, interestingly, get hits from Arpanet - I assumed that was dead an buried! Non-serach engine hit's are almost always very quick - people just scanning though prices I expect (because that's what I do). It's worth having a look at your Alexa rank too - it gives historical data right back to when your site started and compares your sites performance against general trends. Cheers Richard |
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posted: 11 Feb 2008 18:21 from: Russ E click the date to link to this post click member name to view archived images |
For the CLAG site (clag.org.uk), here are the top 50 browser types based on about 220k page views in 2007: 1 Internet Explorer 6.0 31.96% 2 Internet Explorer 7.0 25.24% 3 Yahoo Robot 17.01% 4 Firefox 2.0 9.18% 5 MSN Robot 5.68% 6 Safari 1.51% 7 Firefox 1.5 1.47% 8 Google Robot 1.38% 9 Netscape 1.20% 10 Mozilla 5 1.15% 11 Ask Jeeves Robot 0.96% 12 Internet Explorer 5.0 0.61% 13 Firefox 1.0 0.42% 14 Opera 9.2 0.37% 15 Internet Explorer 4.0 0.34% 16 Internet Explorer 5.5 0.29% 17 Opera 9.0 0.13% 18 Alexa Robot 0.12% 19 Konqueror 3.0 0.09% 20 Opera 9.1 0.08% 21 Konqueror 3.1 0.08% 22 Konqueror 3.5 0.08% 23 Netscape 7.2 0.08% 24 Internet Explorer 5.2 0.06% 25 Netscape 8.1 0.06% 26 Netscape 7.0 0.06% 27 Camino 0.05% 28 Internet Explorer 5.1 0.04% 29 Netscape 7.1 0.04% 30 Opera 8.5 0.03% 31 Opera 8.0 0.03% 32 Internet Explorer 3.0 0.03% 33 SeaMonkey 1.0 0.02% 34 SeaMonkey 1.1 0.02% 35 Firefox 0.9 0.01% 36 HTTrack 0.01% 37 Firefox 0.10 0.01% 38 Netscape 8.0 0.01% 39 Wget 0.01% 40 Java 1.5 0.01% 41 Opera 7.0 0.01% 42 Firefox 0.8 0.01% 43 Java 1.4 0.01% 44 Konqueror 3.4 0.01% 45 Nokia WAP Mobile 0.01% 46 Opera 7.5 0.01% 47 Mozilla 0.00% 48 Lynx 0.00% 49 Opera 7.2 0.00% 50 Firebird 0.7 0.00% (stats provided by our ISP - which actually gives figures for the top 100 browsers, but as you can see, from 47th onwards the figures became insignificant in two decimal places) regards Russ Elliott |
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Last edited on 11 Feb 2008 18:33 by Russ E |
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